"Recently released WikiLeaks cables reveal the official
US view that MINUSTAH has turned out to be an 'indispensible....financial
and regionaly security bargain for the USG (US government)' and the 'Aristide
(m)ovement (m)ust (b)e (s)topped."

Deserving much better, imperial Washington defiantly
denies them. As a result, their suffering continues under deplorable conditions.
More on that below.

On October 14, the Security Council renewed MINUSTAH's
mandate for another year. Haitians never wanted them and don't now. They're
imperial occupiers, enforcers, not peacekeepers. They don't promote democracy.
They suppress it.

Last November, Nepalese troops introduced cholera in
Haiti's rice growing area. A French epidemiologist's study confirmed it.
More on that below.

Human rights are non-starters. Peaceful protests against
deep seated grievances are suppressed. Haitians were well served under
Aristide and won't quit trying to restore his achievements. Long denied
social justice drives their commitment now.

Last summer, a year and a half after Haiti's devastating
January 2010 earthquake, Bill Quigley explained challenges so far unmet.

Haitians lucky enough to have housing live in heavily
damaged structures "designated for demolition." Hundreds of thousands
make do with "flimsy tents or tarps." Security is poor, water
and electricity scarce, and cholera and other diseases rage.

Thousands living in tents face evictions with nowhere
to go, some forced out at "gunpoint." Last summer, 320,000 cholera
cases were reported. Now it's much higher. Before Haiti's quake, no one
died of cholera. Its raging epidemic now claimed thousands. More on that
below.

"Haiti is living through a profound humanitarian
crisis that affects the human rights of those displaced by the disaster."

He stopped short of saying Washington doesn't give a
damn, and Western indifference turns a blind eye to extreme suffering.
Plundering Haiti's resources and exploiting its cheap labor define their
agenda, nothing else.

In early October, Quigley returned to Haiti and discussed
what he saw, saying:

"Broken and collapsed buildings remain in every
neighborhood. Men pull oxcarts by hand through the streets. Women carry
5 gallon plastic jugs of water on their heads, dipped from manhole covers
in the street."

Hundreds of thousands are still homeless, surviving best
they can in tents and tarp-covered shelters. Unemployment is rampant. So
is extreme poverty and human depravation.

Nothing's being done to help. "No public works projects.
No housing developments. No public food or public water distribution centers."
So visible sign that authorities or Western governments care. Haitians
ask:

"Where is the money the world promised" to
send? What's allocated goes for commercial development, not humanitarian
needs. Like always, Haitians are on their own out of luck. As a result,
many lives are endangered.

"The world has moved on," said Quigley. Oxfam
came and left. Red Cross volunteers do little. Washington and Western nations
always treated Haitians contemptuously. Badly needing help, they're left
to suffer out of sight and mind.

Haiti's Raging Cholera Epidemic

Last October, cholera struck Haiti. At least eight of
its 10 provinces were affected. It got scant major media attention then
and none now. Nepalese Blue Helmets introduced it in Haiti's Artibonite
main rice-growing area. Positive confirmation identified them as the source.

In July, 386,429 cases were reported, including 5,885
deaths. The Dominican Republic was also affected. On October 21, AP said
the World Health Organization predicted over 500,000 cases by end of 2011.

Cholera's also a disease of poverty. Stopping its spread
may not work until underlying conditions change, including contaminated
water, densely populated neighborhoods, and hundreds of thousands living
on streets in makeshift shelters.

Symptoms include diarrhea and vomiting, producing dehydration
and early death if not treated. Under good conditions, it's entirely preventable
and treatable if properly done on time. For decades, Haiti was spared.
Epidemic conditions now rage.

Haitians aren't strangers to adversity and anguish. For
over 500 years, they've suffered oppression, slavery, despotism, colonialism,
reparations, embargoes, sanctions, deep poverty, starvation, disease, unrepayable
debt, and calamities like destructive hurricanes, the January 2010 earthquake,
and now cholera for the past year.

America immiserated Haitians for nearly two centuries.
It pledged over $1.1 billion in post-quake aid. Most was earmarked for
development, not essentials to cope with crisis conditions, including critically
needed new housing.

On October 20, Doctors Without Borders/Medecins Sans
Frontieres (MSF) said:

"One year since the onset of the cholera epidemic
in Haiti, people all over the country are still threatened by the deadly
disease, and healthcare services and measures to prevent its spread remain
inadequate...."

As a result, "thousands of Haitians are still getting
sick from cholera every week, and some are still dying."

MSF predicts cholera will persist for years because causal
conditions aren't changing. MSF's Haiti head of mission Romain Gitenet
called it "unacceptable."

On October 21, Partners in Health (PIH) said cholera
bacteria "continues to contaminate lakes, rivers and canals that millions
of people use each day for drinking, cooking and bathing...." As long
as this persists, it's "not going away."

PIH co-founder Dr. Paul Farmer believes "at some
point the disease will become endemic in Haiti." Addressing a potential
catastrophe demands developing a comprehensive response so far not forthcoming.

Washington and Western nations able to help instead wage
imperial wars to colonize, occupy and exploit other countries like Haiti.
Humanitarian concerns aren't ever addressed.

Haitians are on their own to survive through whatever
help organizations like PIH, MSF, and others provide. Most NGOs notoriously
exploit Haiti. With over 10,000 there, it's called "the Republic of
NGOs" for good reason.

They reinforce oppression and exclusion. Organizations
like Save the Children, Catholic Relief Services, CARE International, World
Vision and many others profit from wars, floods, famines, and other disasters
like earthquakes.

If there's a way to make a buck from human misery, they'll
find ways to do it. For them, only profits and self-enrichment matter,
not sworn mandates to serve equitably, fairly and responsibly.

Since Haiti's January 2010 quake, they've scrambled to
cash in. For some, cholera conditions mean greater profits. Hundreds of
thousands of victims need clean water, effective sanitation, rehydration,
and proper treatment, not vaccines known to cause more harm than good.

Foreigners have been "saving" Haitians for
over 200 years, NGOs since 1839, and UN agencies post-WW II. Except for
the few dedicated to help, oppressed, impoverished, suffering, sick and
dying Haitians would be best served if they left.

Otherwise, they'll keep "saving" them to death.
Haitians endured hell for over 500 years. Under Washington's imperial boot,
Martelly, and UN occupation, conditions now are as bad as ever.

Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.

Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
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